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  • Oh my God.”

  • Hey.”

  • Hello.”

  • What’s up?”

  • What’s up?”

  • Wait, I lost you for a second.

  • You froze.”

  • “[Singing] What do you want from me?

  • Why don’t you run from me?

  • What are you wondering?

  • What do you know?”

  • When did you first start making music?”

  • Like, when I was like 11.”

  • How old are you?”

  • “I’m 17 now.

  • I feel like I’ve been 16 for, like, my whole life.

  • So I’m 17 now.

  • And then my brother, he started around 12.

  • Me and him were both doing the same thing in the same house.

  • And we just were like, we live three feet away

  • from each other,

  • why don’t we do this together?

  • [Singing]

  • The creative production writing

  • crew of Billie’s debut album’s two people.

  • It’s just her and me.

  • We wroteBury a Friendon my 21st birthday.

  • And we were playing Lollapalooza.”

  • Singing: “I’ve never fallen from quite this high.

  • Falling into your ocean eyes.”

  • “I was, like, away from all my friends.

  • I couldn’t have a birthday party or anything.

  • And so I was like, well, I love making music,

  • so let’s rent a studio.”

  • And I do remember having a feeling of,

  • like, if we spend all day of my birthday,

  • we better make something that, like, comes out.”

  • Finneas just started making this shuffle beat.”

  • So it’s [beat boxing]”

  • [beat playing]

  • And I thought it was sick.”

  • It feels kind of like a football chant.

  • It’s a really body- friendly rhythm,

  • if you play it at the right tempo.”

  • Lyrically, where did you start?”

  • “I really wanted to kind of do, like,

  • a bunch of Ws in a row, like a bunch of questions.

  • [Singing] What do you want from me?

  • Why don’t you run from me?

  • What are you wondering?

  • What do you know?

  • And it was like, who is this character?

  • And what the hell are they?

  • And I think just, automatically, it

  • was so clear that it was like the monster under your bed.”

  • And then I was like, that’d be

  • great to write a song from that perspective.”

  • Why aren’t you scared of me?

  • Why do you care for me?

  • When we all fall asleep, where do we go?”

  • What was it about Billie’s voice

  • that, even from an early age, you knew

  • you wanted to work with her.”

  • Her emotionality.

  • Every time she sang a lyric, I believed it.

  • Billie would, like, sing a ‘Hotline Blingcover

  • by Drake.”

  • Singing: “You used to call me on my cellphone late night

  • when you need my love.”

  • And I was just like, did you write this?

  • And she was like, no, it’s ‘Hotline Bling.’

  • I was like, oh, wow.

  • When you sing it, it feels like you wrote it, to me.”

  • Where do you normally write and record?”

  • Weve written and recorded, like, 90 percent of everything

  • weve ever made in my bedroom in my parentshouse.

  • It’s really small, but it’s really cozy.

  • Billie will sit on my bed.

  • And I have, like, a lot of big Murakami pillows on my bed.

  • She gets inspired.

  • Like, well track something.

  • And I’ll sit, and I’ll work on production.

  • Then well work on lyrics together.

  • I have a piano in there.

  • We tend to work pretty long days.

  • Mom will just, like, bring in food,

  • because well just keep going.”

  • Since he moved out, he’s lost, like, 15 pounds.”

  • Because you don’t bring snacks?”

  • He doesn’t eat enough.”

  • He doesn’t know how to cook.”

  • What was it like for you and your husband

  • when your kids first started making music together?”

  • “I mean, Billie was already singing all the time.

  • And she had this beautiful voice.”

  • Singing: “I don’t want to live in a world without you.”

  • And, like, every year she’d sing in the home school

  • talent show.”

  • Singing: “And I should know.”

  • Finneas had a band.

  • And it was very all-consuming.”

  • [Singing]

  • And so, you know,

  • it just was kind of this perfectly natural thing

  • when Finneas suddenly was, like,

  • hey, let me record you doing this song.”

  • Ready?”

  • Yeah.

  • Are you?”

  • Maybe.”

  • We knew they were amazing.

  • But nobody in their wildest dreams

  • thought anyone would hear it except, you know,

  • 20 friends.”

  • [Cheering]

  • [All singing]

  • [Cheering]

  • All right, so you have the, like, sort

  • of nursery rhyme hook melody.

  • And you had some verses.

  • When did you first start incorporating

  • the spooky noises?”

  • “I was in the dentist’s chair.

  • And they were shaving off my Invisalign attachments.

  • And it was this loud, like, [drill sound] [bleep]. And I

  • thought it was so dope.

  • And I pull out my phone immediately

  • and pressed record.”

  • [Drilling]

  • “O.K. Rinse out and let’s take a peek.”

  • “I found it very horrible to listen to.

  • But it worked great in the song.”

  • Singing: “Calling security.

  • Keeping my head held down.”

  • As soon as there was a line about stepping on glass,

  • I wanted to hear someone stepping on glass.

  • And as soon as there was a line about a staple,

  • I was, like, smacking a staple gun.”

  • Singing: “Step on the glass.

  • Staple your tongue.”

  • There is also one called nightmare horse.”

  • [Sound effect playing]

  • Another one I like is Easy Bake Oven.”

  • Yeah.

  • Singing: “Bury a friend.”

  • That [bleep] yeah, it’s

  • literally an Easy Bake Oven.”

  • And then I processed a ton of her going, like, ah!

  • And then it ends up sounding like

  • [Sound effect] —

  • I put that all over the song.”

  • Singing: “Cleaning you out.

  • Am I satisfactory?”

  • The song is so weird.

  • It’s so weird.

  • And we were, like, can you understand it

  • and actually sing along?

  • And so I remember, like, we tried

  • a billion different things.

  • And then we were, like, you know

  • what, this needs a bridge.”

  • So how did it end up sounding?

  • Can you do a little bit of it?”

  • LikeThe debt I owe.

  • Got to sell my soul.

  • I can’t say no.

  • No, I can’t say no.”

  • Singing: “Then my limbs all froze.

  • And my eyes won’t close.

  • And I can’t say no.

  • I can’t say no.”

  • “I like it because it sounds like a Kurt Weill song

  • almost, to me.

  • Do you know what I mean?”

  • The structure is super weird.

  • It’s like, hook —”

  • “A verse.

  • A pre-chorus.”

  • Drop.”

  • “A hook.”

  • Verse two.

  • Alternate verse two.”

  • Bridge.”

  • Pre-chorus.

  • Drop.”

  • And then the hook.”

  • Normally songs are like, verse, chorus, verse, chorus,

  • bridge, chorus.

  • Like, that’s pretty much the way that they are.

  • There was, like, a point right at the end

  • of working on the song where it was suddenly,

  • like, much more traditional song structure.

  • We were like, all right, well, now,

  • were making, like, a pop record here.

  • So I’m really glad it ended up being the weirder

  • version of the song.”

  • Singing: “Honestly, I thought that I would be dead by now.

  • Calling security, keeping my head held down.”

  • “I don’t want to be in the pop world.

  • I don’t want to be in the alternative world, or the

  • hip-hop world, or the R&B world,

  • or whatever [expletive], you know?

  • I want it to be, like, what kind of music you listen to?

  • Billie Eilish kind of music, you know?

  • Like —”

  • Yeah.”

  • The other kind.”

  • “I’m telling you all now.

  • This is going to be the biggest artist, 2019.”

  • When the song came out, I said to Billie,

  • I was, like, ‘I think we just get to do

  • whatever we want, now.’ ”

  • Singing: “I want to end me.”

  • They don’t remember this.

  • But this is what happened.

  • One of the other things I do in life

  • is a lot of aerial, like, circus trapeze.

  • So I was, like, can you guys write

  • a song that has the perfect beat for my warm-up?

  • And Finneas goes, oh, shuffle beat.

  • Yeah, I’ve always wanted to make something

  • with a shuffle beat.

  • They don’t remember this story.”

  • That’s not how it happened.”

  • If she feels like she was part of the impetus

  • forBury a Friend,’ like, more power to her.

  • I don’t personally remember that being a part

  • of the genesis of the song.”

  • But it happened.”

Oh my God.”

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